FANGING FLICK
STORY SIMON MAJOR COOL FLICK FACT:^
Bobby’s Camaro was
originally a proper
race-prepped Z28 built
for actor James Garner’s
racing team.
W
ITH just enough time to grow his hair
long following his now-legendary role as
John Milner in the 1973 classic, American
Graffiti, Paul Le Mat slid back behind the
wheel of a toughie to play young Los Angeles mechanic
Bobby in 1975’s Aloha, Bobby and Rose.
Bobby is floating through life spinning spanners by day
and cruising and racing his beloved Camaro at night,
while hustling cash at pool halls in between. Through
bad choices and shirking his responsibilities, he seems
permanently stuck behind the eight-ball – sometimes
literally – and dabbles in petty crime to help make
ends meet.
He strikes up a friendship with the sweet and spunky
Rose (Hull), a young mum balancing raising her son with
caring for her alcoholic ex-actress mother (Bartlett).
With their future prospects looking decidedly stale, the
couple look to each other in the hope of finding some
direction together. When a dodgy robbery ends up with
the accidental killing of a young shop assistant, Bobby
and Rose go on the run and hit the road, looking to escape
into Mexico.
The romance and freedom normally offered by the open
highway is heavily clouded by the trouble hanging over the
pair, which soon has Rose second-guessing her choices
and questioning the strength of their fresh relationship.
A chance meeting with a fairly loose wannabe football
star and entrepreneur, the gun-toting, hard-drinking
Buford (McIntire), along with his better half Donna Sue
(French), initially looks like trouble for Bobby and Rose.
But after Buford learns of their predicament, he throttles
back on the attitude and offers them a chance for a clean
start, so the pair pack up to follow Buford east in the hope
of eluding capture.
Le Mat’s portrayal of Bobby is very Milner-esque, but
works okay, whereas Dianne Hull as the sweet and naïve
Rose is rather bland and lacking conviction. But Tim
McIntire as the boisterous, loud-mouthed Buford steals
the show, and will have you cringing at times on the lead
characters’ behalf. Leigh French as Donna Sue matches
him perfectly, with plenty of sassiness and spunk, and had
the flick been about this pair, they would have smashed
across the border to freedom with the music blaring and
nary a toilet stop or relationship drama between them.
VERDICT: 3/
ALOHA, Bobby and Rose starts with all four barrels
wide open and smoking the hides, but soon snaps the
throttle cable and coasts to idle – ironically mirroring the
emptiness of the main characters’ lives. The soundtrack,
however, is pretty cool, with several early Elton John tunes
adding enjoyable warmth to the sights and sounds of
1970s LA. The Camaro is definitely the star attraction
though, and its final black guise will have true hot car
aficionados cheering – and the purists crying into their
matching-numbers engine coolant. s
ALOHA, BOBBY AND ROSE 1975
TWO YOUNG LOVERS IN A CITY OF DREAMS
BREAKDOWN
VEHICLES: 1968 Chevrolet
Camaro, custom 1973
Lincoln Continental MkIV,
1970 Chevrolet C30, 1969
Ford Econoline, 1965
Ford F-Series, 1973 Ford
Mustang, 1971 Jensen
Interceptor MkIII, 1973
Plymouth Satellite, 1973
Plymouth ’Cuda
STARS: Paul Le Mat, Dianne
Hull, Tim McIntire, Leigh
French, Martine Bartlett,
Robert Carradine, Noble
Willingham
DIRECTOR: Floyd Mutrux
ACTION: Bobby’s Camaro
looks and sounds menacing,
and works in nicely with
the neat street cruising and
drag-strip action
PLOT: Two young
daydreamers fall in love
but have to skip town after
being accused of robbery
and murder
AVAILABLE: DVD
1818 STREET MACHINE STREET MACHINE